Cai Ruolian, director of the Hong Kong Education Bureau, said that after the legislation of Article 23 of the Hong Kong Basic Law, the content of the existing primary and secondary schools will be updated in accordance with the new legislation.

Comprehensive Hong Kong Zhongtong News Agency and Hong Kong Commercial Radio reported on Tuesday (February 13) that Hong Kong Chief Executive Li Jiachao's key point last year proposed to launch patriotism education.It is said that after the legislation of Article 23 of the Hong Kong Basic Law, the official will not deliberately open a new discipline, but the existing primary and secondary school curriculum content will be compared with the times and updated in accordance with the new laws.

Cai Ruolian said that at different learning stages, students have different cognitive skills, and everything they want to learn is different.Primary and secondary school students are mainly established law -abiding values.But universities and even students who study law must know more deeply.

As for the current teachers, they must pass the Basic Law and the National Security Law test. Cai Ruolian said that there will be no 23 exams or teachers to study Hong Kong law.

She said for example that the teacher is not a legal expert to mess around the road and the driving deduction system. The teacher does not expect that the teacher will know how to answer related questions.Cai Ruolian said that if students have problems with Article 23, teachers can lead students to visit the Director of the Law Department and the director of the Security Bureau through a special study.Teachers do not need to be legal scholars and answer students related questions.

Cai Ruolian continues, and there is no need to speculate on the outside world after 23 legislations, whether there will be a wave of students and teachers.

Following the promulgation of the Hong Kong National Security Law in 2020, the Hong Kong Government launched the public consultation of Article 23 of the Basic Law on January 30 this year.Acts endangering national security.The Hong Kong Government tried to legislate on the above legislation in 2003. Unexpectedly, hundreds of thousands of people went to the streets to march, causing the Hong Kong government to retreat.